Daimler AG is manufacturing
diesel engine turbochargers in-house. It is another ground-breaking development
by the vehicle builder on its relentless climb to the sunlit uplands of
dominance.
Inevitably, while this is a gain for
Mercedes-Benz it represents a loss of sales business to a vendor; even a loss
of face in the wake of lost euro revenue from such a prestige German customer
as Daimlerwhich, for the first time, becomes the only truck-making OEM to make irs own turbochargers.
In 2014, Daimler made 496,000 trucks, 295,00 vans and 33,000 buses equipped with diesel engines. (the company does not disclose how many diesels it produces in a year). If the company decided to equip all its diesel engines with in-house turbochargers, this could amount to a market of 824,000 units, a sizable volume to justify in-house manufacture.
In 2014, Daimler made 496,000 trucks, 295,00 vans and 33,000 buses equipped with diesel engines. (the company does not disclose how many diesels it produces in a year). If the company decided to equip all its diesel engines with in-house turbochargers, this could amount to a market of 824,000 units, a sizable volume to justify in-house manufacture.
The development by Mercedes-Benz
engineers of their own turbocharger raises several important questions: what
was wrong with the previous bought-in design? How can an engine manufacturer
justify not only the design and development costs of an in house turbocharger
but manufacture also? It must be cheaper to buy a turbocharger than make it
in-house. How many other engine makers produce their own turbocharger?
After all, there is a handful of world-class
turbocharger makers, including BorgWarner, Bosch Mahle Turbo Systems, Cummins Turbo
Technologies (i.e. Holset), Honeywell and IHI, to mention but five. Cummins
Turbo Technologies is constantly launching a stream of new turbo designs; its
designs should be at the cutting edge of technology. Certainly, Mercedes uses
Cummins Turbo Technology turbochargers for its turbo-compound 15-litre OM571
engine. And it used BorgWarner turbos on the previous generation OM471.
And there is another question. How can
an engine manufacturer accrue the hydrodynamic knowledge and manufacturing
expertise to produce a turbocharger that only matches the thermodynamic
efficiency of vendor-made turbos, but has comparable, or even better
reliability?
What was it that caused Mercedes-Benz
engineers (and their senior management) to say, in effect: "Hey you guys, why
don't we make our own turbochargers?" Why would they even give a moment’s consideration
to such an outlandish prospect? What prompted such action?
Only those inside Daimler know the true
answers as the investment in euros is significant, but still lost within the €60
million spent on the OM 471.
On the face of it, one might think that
any world-class turbocharger maker knows much more about the ins and outs of
designing, developing and making turbochargers than Mercedes-Benz. How can
Mercedes-Benz engineers cull together so much experience in such little time to
produce a turbocharger that is better than one purchased from a world-class
vendor? Daimler's only known, and current, yet previous history of turbocharger development and manufacture is at Mercedes High Performance Engines, Brixworth, UK whihc designs, develops and manufacturers turbochargers for F1 engines.
In addition, surely the volumes
produced by the likes of BorgWarner, Cummins Turbo Technology, Honeywell and
IHI might suggest their cost of manufacture is much less than that which
Mercedes-Benz could even come close to matching.
So, why would the Stuttgart-based diesel
engine maker even begin to consider making these components one-house?
Everything seems to be stacked against it.
But then the same could be said about
transmissions. At one time, Mercedes-Benz sourced most, if not all, its commercial
vehicle gearboxes from ZF. Until, that is, it decided to make its own. Now the
truck builder makes credit-worthy gearboxes in-house. Experience shows it has
made a success of this.
By the same token, it can be said that some
years ago, Mercedes-Benz's Mannheim foundry began to cast cylinder heads for
the OM 471 engine in vermicular graphite iron (or compacted graphite iron -
CGI) using its own in-house process control technology. Only the cylinder heads
of the OM 471 use CGI material.
Even this week, Dr. Andreas Gorbach of Daimler’s
platform management HDEP/MDEG, told Auto
Industry Newsletter: "We have been using CGI only for cylinder heads for all OM47x
worldwide. These have been cast in Mannheim since the SOP (start of production)
of the DD15 in 2008. The cylinder block has been designed in such a way that
(CGI) it is not required."
So why not turbochargers? If the
Mercedes-Benz commercial vehicle and diesel engine departments can employ the
new turbocharger in other in-house engines, thereby achieving sensible volumes
and economies of scale, then it should make it easier to reduce unit costs and
secure “holistic” economic viability, possibly even to the extent of making one million turbos a year long-term.
This will require Daimler to spread
in-house turbos as far and wide as possible. So no doubt other engines will
follow. Which engine is next? As Dr. Gorbach observes: "Wait and see."
Why turbochargers
So,
why not turbochargers? Well, the Daimler press release gives a clue. It states:
“A new asymmetric turbocharger is
partly responsible for the swift and substantial increase in power delivery at
low rev speeds. It was developed by Mercedes-Benz and is manufactured in the
Mannheim engine plant. An in-house turbocharger ensures customised adaptation
to the requirements of the OM 471. The turbocharger excels for its outstanding
efficiency. Very tight production tolerances are a guarantee of supreme quality
and durability.”
“As before, the asymmetric turbocharger
features a fixed-geometry turbine. From a technical standpoint, this variant is
far less complex and thereby less prone to faults than a VNT turbocharger, for
instance. It also does without a wastegate valve, further simplifying the
design. This measure reduces the turbocharger's complexity and avoids a
potential source of faults, such as leaks – another plus point as far as the
robustness and durability of the OM 471 are concerned.”
Mercedes-Benz declares that it is not using a wastegate, yet gives no hint as to how it is compensating for the loss of the wastegate without complicating the design in any way, Company press releases have a habit of being economical with the truth.
It perhaps should be pointed out here that as a turboocharger can rotate at speeds far beyond what is require, or what it is safely capable of, its speed has to be controlled. A wastegate is the most common mechanical speed control system and is often augmented with an electronic boost controller. The main function of the wastegate is to allow some of the exhaust to bypass the turbine when the required boost pressure is achieved. The wastegate's absence, and the multiplicity of associated sensors required for its efficient operation, suggests Mercedes engineers have found a clever way to duplicate its effect by controlling turbne speed and optimising transient behaviour. Clearly, in the past Mercedes has suffered reliability issues of some kind in this area.
So why adopt in-house turbochargers? What is the real technical justification for the move? The answer appears to centre on one word Mercedes-Benz engineers mutter under their breath as they discuss their new turbochargers - reliability. Any hint of unreliability is not required for the 12.8-litre engine which has emission control based on SCR technology, EGR (using three of the six cylinders) and particulate filter to meet Euro V1.
It perhaps should be pointed out here that as a turboocharger can rotate at speeds far beyond what is require, or what it is safely capable of, its speed has to be controlled. A wastegate is the most common mechanical speed control system and is often augmented with an electronic boost controller. The main function of the wastegate is to allow some of the exhaust to bypass the turbine when the required boost pressure is achieved. The wastegate's absence, and the multiplicity of associated sensors required for its efficient operation, suggests Mercedes engineers have found a clever way to duplicate its effect by controlling turbne speed and optimising transient behaviour. Clearly, in the past Mercedes has suffered reliability issues of some kind in this area.
So why adopt in-house turbochargers? What is the real technical justification for the move? The answer appears to centre on one word Mercedes-Benz engineers mutter under their breath as they discuss their new turbochargers - reliability. Any hint of unreliability is not required for the 12.8-litre engine which has emission control based on SCR technology, EGR (using three of the six cylinders) and particulate filter to meet Euro V1.
The implication is that there have been
some reliability issues with vendor turbochargers. Whether these issues are
directly linked to vendor turbochargers or associated components, such as
sensors or other items is not clear.
But the reliability issues must have
been so significant as to prompt engineers even to contemplate in-house
manufacture. It also implies frustration - even reaching supervisory board level. It cannot have been an easy decision.
But whoever made the decision to manufacture turbochargers was taking the long
view - and a holistic view
The OM 471 is just the start. No doubt
the company will use Mannheim as the location to make turbochargers for other
truck diesel engines, just as the facility makes CGI cylinder heads for
worldwide use.
There is another reason for using
in-house turbos. Turbochargers sourced from vendors are inevitably a compromise
as one design has to meet the requirements of various customers. However, by
designing in house to meet the very specific – and demanding – requirements of
Mercedes-Benz engines, engineers can get very close to the optimum. And if
necessary in future it is easier to make minor changes to turbocharger design
to meet specific market (and emissions) needs.
Turbochargers, together with the
delicate handling of inlet and exhaust gases, are at the root of meeting
emissions requirements and improving brake specific fuel consumption – and indirectly
vehicle fuel economy.
The conclusion has to be drawn that by
designing, developing and manufacturing its own turbochargers, Mercedes-Benz
engineers can have a much tighter control over not only the performance of their
engines – and this includes emissions performance as well as durability – but, per se, the entire manufacturing cost. It is just conceivable that the new Mercedes-Benz turbochargers are not cheaper than their counterparts purchased from BorgWarner. But the engine maker could be recouping the cost by producing an engine which, overall, is more reliable and which in turn brings cost-benefits.
Closely linked to the word reliability
is the word simplicity. The new Mercedes-Benz turbochargers are simple in
design – and that means less complex, easier to machine and assemble, and
cheaper. There are no variable guide vanes and no waste gate and this
turbocharger uses an aluminium impeller – not expensive titanium. All of this
implies that engineers have managed to reduce the number of sensors too.
But their nature, sensors can be the
root cause of error codes and faulty displays. It is known too that in respect
of emissions – NOx and particulates – that legislation is streets ahead of
sensor technology. So until sensor technology catches up engineers have to
reduce the sensor’s field of influence.
Research in the US has shown that EPA
2010 diesel engines are less reliable than their forebears, which may explain
why gliders are popular among some operators.
So Daimler has taken note. Engine
reliability and truck down-time are vital parameters for operators. They can
decide which truck an operator buys.
Interestingly, although Daimler claims
improved fuel economy arising from the new engines, not all of it is down to
the engine alone as other factors play their part. It should also be noted that while
fuel economy is said to be improved Adblue consumption has risen from 3.5 per
cent to 5 per cent of fuel consumption.
Key Component
A
key component of the new generation of engines and thier improved fuel economy is the latest-generation X-Pulse
version of Bosch’s APCRS amplified-piston common rail fuel injection system – the
unique common-rail system with pressure booster in the injector and “unrestricted
flexibility” for modelling the injection system. It is understood that
Mercedes-Benz is the only OEM to use this system, suggesting a tightly-written
control between the two German companies, or some exclusive arrangement for a
number of years to give the truck-maker unrivalled leadership. It is the only OEM running at such high injection pressures.
Maximum rail pressure has been
increased from 900 to 1,160 bar, resulting in a maximum injection pressure of 2,700
bar. It is understood the rail pressure can be raised further if necessary
increase the injection pressure to 3,000 bar – a pressure that has been
mentioned in some quarters. Sturman Industries Inc. for example has run its injectors at 3,300 bar.
The injection nozzle, which is the only
region to experience these magnification pressures, is an eight-hole nozzle
(previously seven holes), increasing the maximum flow rate by around ten
percent.
Additional modifications include the
piston bowl geometry, the sizeable increase in compression ratio from 17.3:1 to
18.3:1, along with a reduced exhaust gas recirculation rate (EGR rate). All
these measures add up to a further improvement in efficiency across the entire
engine performance map. This in turn lowers fuel consumption significantly. The
optimum values in the consumption characteristic map have followed the new
torque curve towards lower rev speeds.
Systematically configuring the engine for low
fuel consumption means that untreated NOx emissions rise but is countered by
the SCR
Meanwhile, the loss of an important
customer such as Mercedes-Benz cannot be an easy pill for any vendor to
swallow.
The name Mercedes-Benz is synonymous
with quality and reliability. To be associated with the name is to share the
prestige of the vehicle builder. To be sidelined is enough for questions to be
asked at vendor board level: why, how and what can we do to mitigate it, are
but three.
The decision by Daimler at board level to make turbochargers is surely a message to the management of all vendors. Lurking in the background is the veiled implication that if vendor technology, quality, reliability, cost, etc., etc., fall short of Daimler's requirements, then the company will take action to bypass it and, if necessary manufacture it in-house. Turbochargers could represent the latest in a series of important lessons.
The decision by Daimler at board level to make turbochargers is surely a message to the management of all vendors. Lurking in the background is the veiled implication that if vendor technology, quality, reliability, cost, etc., etc., fall short of Daimler's requirements, then the company will take action to bypass it and, if necessary manufacture it in-house. Turbochargers could represent the latest in a series of important lessons.
Meanwhile, BorgWarner's manufacturing facility in Seneca, South Carolina, this week received an Excellence in Quality Award from Honda North America. Since 2002, the plant has received 12 supplier awards from Honda, including seven for quality, four for delivery and one for engineering innovation.The plant supplies Interactive Torque Management all-wheel-drive technology for the Honda Pilot..
3 comments:
I have seen it said the dominance of the F1 Mercedes team with the 1.6l V6 turbocharged engine is a result of their unique design of the turbo.
Your reference to BorgWarner's 'Excellence in Quality' award from Honda in the US raises the question of the validity of such accolades, which are invariably PR instigated. Herman Goering is alleged to have said 'when I hear the word culture I reach for my gun'. In the same way many practical and down-to-earth engineers are apt to cringe with scepticism - or even cynicism - when they hear the word 'excellence', typically in the description of a manufacturing plant as a 'centre of excellence'. It smacks of self congratulation in a context where REAL excellence ought to be apparent in product quality and reputation without the need for proclamation.
Toyota is also manufacturing its own turbos from scratch for both its new 2.7l diesel and the 2.0t in the NX200t.
I'd argue that this is of far more significance to the turbo industry than the loss of a few thousand turbos on an OTR engine from Mercedes.
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